I’m with Nick M, recovering from surgery so have no money to pay for any advice, and to have the best advice in the world for free is absolutely awesome. It’s priceless knowledge
Great videos! Please keep them coming! I really appreciate how you demonstrate turning in a practical manner. I have learned a lot from your books, dvds, and now RUclips videos!
Thank you sooo much for these free videos. I’m not in a place right now to take lessons, so I watch your instruction and take notes like it’s a class. I was trying to figure out a way to consistently take of the tenon safely, without buying a set of cole jaws, so this second bowl lesson helped out a ton. Thanks again.
Thanks Richard,really helpful as always. I really like the style of your videos,how you explain the tool handling technique and the fact that you don’t edit out when things don’t go quite right. I have learned so much from you and really look forward to put what you are showing into my own turning. I am so glad you got out of the wine business!
Thanks again for the useful tips. I so wish you could paint a red dot in the flute of the gouge. This would make it so much easier to notice the angle of the flute while cutting the the bowl.
Thank you so much for your videos, Richard! I have only recently become your subscriber, but I have watched all your videos with pleasure. You are helping me to solve several problems that I have encountered. Your solutions are just wonderful, they will help me solve my problems with sharpening the cutters and fixing the workpiece!! Thank you again very much!
Great lesson as always, Richard. I use jam chucks for boxes but rarely for bowls being spoiled with a vacuum chuck I made. I have been using a cherry bowl daily for cereal for about 10 years.
I've had home-made vacuum chucks based on vacuum cleaners, but for around 25 years I was turning mostly jarrah or redgum burl that usually had enough holes to render a vacuum chuck ineffectual and a liquid finish essential. With solid timber vacuum chucking is the way to go.
Lol...the jam chuck went on a little fast, 7:21. I thought the video was on 5x speed...lol. Good video. I've modified my old bowls with mixed results. I need your light touch. Please leave the finished product on screen a bit longer in your videos. Thanks...Ken
I don't know if my method is used by woodturners to remove a tenon instead of using an "adjustable jaws set". I've made a concave cone (and a convexe cone) which can be fitted in a chuck as a driver. I take the finished piece of wood between the cone (with cloth to protect it) and the tailstock with a fine tip. So I can remove almost the whole tenon, the rest is removed easely afterward. It works very well, no vibrations, no risk of ejection of the piece of wood, almost all pieces of wood can be fitted in a cone.
You'll see many variations of your method in my bowl videos. I find non-slip cloth better than ordinary fabric and often use an MDF disk to prevent the tailcentre penetrating the wood. Before modern chucks came along about 35 years ago we professional turners used 3-jaw engineers chucks, faceplates, and screw chucks when turning bowls. To remove chuck marks bowls were mounted between centres or over or into a jam chuck that was mounted on a screw chuck.
Richard, in your video of your workshop tour, you briefly show your extraction system. As it appears to function really well and looks simple enough to construct, can you give me more information please? I understand the box section etc behind the lathe, its more the size/power of the extractor itself. Many thanks for your input. 👍
Hi from Quebec Mr Raffan. Thank you so much more all useful tips. It's always interesting to see your video and I always looking forward to the next video. I would like to know what kind of oil tou use with the bees wax. Thanks again.
Nice! I suppose one could put some kind of material in the bowl beforehand to prevent damage and then "punch" it out through the screw hole with a flat-headed sort of punch. Kind regards.
@@RichardRaffanwoodturning Right, attempting to highlight the observation that it appears the eccentricity is a result of the rim being slightly oval and squeezed into a circle. Wonderfully done video and very useful. The close-up shots are great!
I’m with Nick M, recovering from surgery so have no money to pay for any advice, and to have the best advice in the world for free is absolutely awesome. It’s priceless knowledge
I believe this is the exact solution for a problem I've encountered.
Great videos! Please keep them coming! I really appreciate how you demonstrate turning in a practical manner. I have learned a lot from your books, dvds, and now RUclips videos!
Just last night I was trying to figure out how to remove the foot on a bowl. Thanks for this Richard!
Thank you, gifted teachers are few .. your videos are appreciated.
Thanks again Richard, loved those two methods!
Amos Peterson
Thank you sooo much for these free videos. I’m not in a place right now to take lessons, so I watch your instruction and take notes like it’s a class. I was trying to figure out a way to consistently take of the tenon safely, without buying a set of cole jaws, so this second bowl lesson helped out a ton. Thanks again.
Thanks Richard,really helpful as always. I really like the style of your videos,how you explain the tool handling technique and the fact that you don’t edit out when things don’t go quite right. I have learned so much from you and really look forward to put what you are showing into my own turning.
I am so glad you got out of the wine business!
Thank you, sir! Your timing is perfect, as I just had a need to do exactly this! Time well spent- I learned a lot.
Thanks again for the useful tips. I so wish you could paint a red dot in the flute of the gouge. This would make it so much easier to notice the angle of the flute while cutting the the bowl.
Great techniques Richard. Thank you for sharing your years of experience.
Thanks Richard. Amazing technique .
Great video as always
Regards
Steve UK London
Thank you so much for your videos, Richard! I have only recently become your subscriber, but I have watched all your videos with pleasure. You are helping me to solve several problems that I have encountered. Your solutions are just wonderful, they will help me solve my problems with sharpening the cutters and fixing the workpiece!! Thank you again very much!
Really useful demonstration-and well timed, thank you for sharing these techniques.
Great lesson as always, Richard. I use jam chucks for boxes but rarely for bowls being spoiled with a vacuum chuck I made. I have been using a cherry bowl daily for cereal for about 10 years.
I've had home-made vacuum chucks based on vacuum cleaners, but for around 25 years I was turning mostly jarrah or redgum burl that usually had enough holes to render a vacuum chuck ineffectual and a liquid finish essential. With solid timber vacuum chucking is the way to go.
Another really informative demonstration. Thanks a lot.
Lol...the jam chuck went on a little fast, 7:21. I thought the video was on 5x speed...lol. Good video. I've modified my old bowls with mixed results. I need your light touch.
Please leave the finished product on screen a bit longer in your videos. Thanks...Ken
Very helpful, thanks as always.
learn a lot from you Richard... Tim👍👍
Great information as always. I'm lazy, I would have used Cole Jaws, but it's always good to learn other methods. Thanks for sharing.
Less messing about with jam chucks and fast - once you get the hang of it.
I love simple!
I don't know if my method is used by woodturners to remove a tenon instead of using an "adjustable jaws set".
I've made a concave cone (and a convexe cone) which can be fitted in a chuck as a driver.
I take the finished piece of wood between the cone (with cloth to protect it) and the tailstock with a fine tip.
So I can remove almost the whole tenon, the rest is removed easely afterward.
It works very well, no vibrations, no risk of ejection of the piece of wood, almost all pieces of wood can be fitted in a cone.
You'll see many variations of your method in my bowl videos. I find non-slip cloth better than ordinary fabric and often use an MDF disk to prevent the tailcentre penetrating the wood. Before modern chucks came along about 35 years ago we professional turners used 3-jaw engineers chucks, faceplates, and screw chucks when turning bowls. To remove chuck marks bowls were mounted between centres or over or into a jam chuck that was mounted on a screw chuck.
Richard, in your video of your workshop tour, you briefly show your extraction system. As it appears to function really well and looks simple enough to construct, can you give me more information please? I understand the box section etc behind the lathe, its more the size/power of the extractor itself. Many thanks for your input. 👍
It's a small Jet dust unit shifting about 1200cfm. I've found 1200cfm does a good job collecting fine dust from one machine at a time.
@@RichardRaffanwoodturning many thanks Richard. 👍
As always great lesson....😀
Hi from Quebec Mr Raffan. Thank you so much more all useful tips. It's always interesting to see your video and I always looking forward to the next video. I would like to know what kind of oil tou use with the bees wax. Thanks again.
Boiled linseed oil.
Love your videos, always learn something! What hone(s) do you use on your scrapers?
Super. Do you mind sharing the wood species for the second bowl? Thank you.
They are both Claret ash.
Thanks for the demo Richard. Is that a cloth backed sandpaper you were using?
Take care
Cheers
Harold
It's called Colour Coded Grit and it is cloth backed.
Nice! I suppose one could put some kind of material in the bowl beforehand to prevent damage and then "punch" it out through the screw hole with a flat-headed sort of punch. Kind regards.
Too risky. Tapping the rim on the lathe bed is the safest way to release the bowl.
How to cut a bead??
ruclips.net/video/BtN81mIbwKQ/видео.html
Out of whack…in this case meaning the bowl moved and changed diameter?
Out of whack = not running true, not as it was previously.
@@RichardRaffanwoodturning Right, attempting to highlight the observation that it appears the eccentricity is a result of the rim being slightly oval and squeezed into a circle. Wonderfully done video and very useful. The close-up shots are great!
Is "squozen" a word?
It's a word I use quite often, so it must be.
Great word by a great turner.